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Composition, Pedagogy & the Scholarship of Teaching
Edited by Deborah Minter, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Amy M. Goodburn, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

ISBN 978-0-86709-524-1 / 0-86709-524-5 / 2002 / 176pp / Paperback + Companion Website
Imprint: Boynton/Cook
Availability: In Stock

Grade Level: College

List Price: $24.50
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Part of the The CrossCurrents Series
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Description

How do composition teachers document their teaching? What types of documentation work best? Teaching portfolios, course portfolios, philosophy statements, classroom observation? How can these materials provide essential testimony about our classrooms and our achievements, not just to ourselves and our colleagues but to faculty supervisors, tenure and promotion committees, deans, and provosts?

Documenting our work as teachers offers a rich and productive means for reflection, analysis, and self-assessment of professional progress. Composition, Pedagogy & the Scholarship of Teaching explains how to create these kinds of teaching materials, while offering a sophisticated array of perspectives and materials for developing and maintaining them.

In this outstanding collection of essays and resources, tenured and tenure-track composition faculty, writing program administrators, and graduate students outline a variety of concrete strategies that make the teaching portfolio a powerful tool for
  • assessing professional strengths and weaknesses
  • reviewing programmatic and curricular questions
  • reflecting on individual professional development
  • meeting institutional goals and mandates
  • documenting teaching for professional review and job applications.

Best of all, the book is supplemented by specialized web resources (visit www.heinemann.com/minter-goodburn): syllabi, course materials, and other kinds of information that are an intrinsic part of the professional development of practicing, college-level composition teachers. Not only can these examples serve as models for your own teaching documentation, they can also refine your notions of how best to represent your teaching practice as you become part of the discipline-wide discussion on documenting post-secondary teaching.

Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments
    About the Website
    Preface, Ann Ruggles Gere
    Introduction: Why Document Postsecondary Teaching?, Deborah Minter and Amy M. Goodburn
    Part 1: Practical Concerns in Documenting Teaching
    1. Reconsidering and Reassessing Teaching Portfolios: Reflective and Rhetorical Functions
    Camille Newton, Tracy Singer, Amy D’Antonio, Laura Bush, and Duane Roen
    2. Looping and Linking Heuristics for Teacher Portfolio Development
    Julie Robinson, Lisa Cahill, and Rochelle Rodrigo Blanchard.
    Examples of Looping and Linking
    3. Thinking and Writing Ethnographically for Annual Reviews and Promotion and Tenure Portfolios
    Sara Robbins
    Teching Documentation from Promotion File
    4. Constructed Confessions: Creating a Teaching Self in the Job Search Portfolio
    Peggy O’Neill
    Teaching Documentation for Job Search
    5. Teaching Statements and Teaching Selves
    Ruth M. Mirtz
    Teaching Philosophy Statements
    6. Peer Observation as Collaborative Classroom Inquiry
    Deborah Minter
    Assignments and Sample Observation Materials
    7. The Course Portfolio: Individual and Collective Possibilites
    Amy M. Goodburn
    Sample Course Narratives and Course Portfolios
    Part II: Implications for Documenting Teaching: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reform
    8. Beyond Course Evaluations: Representing Student Voice and Experience
    Margaret K. Willard–Traub
    Teaching Documentation for Job Search
    9. The Medium and the Message: Developing Responsible Methods for Assessing Teaching Portfolios
    Chris M. Anson and Deanna P. Dannels
    10. Reading for Pedagogy: Negotiating the Complexities of Context from a Search Committee Chair’s Perspective
    Donna LeCourt
    11. The Ethics of Required Teaching Portfolios
    Carrie Shively Leverenz
    12. Building Community Through Reflection: Constructing and Reading Teaching Portfolios as a Method of Program Assessment
    Ellen Schendel and Camille Newton
    13. Working Together, Advancing Alone: The Problem of Representing collaboration in Teaching Portfolios
    Stephen Fox
    Teaching Documentation from Tenure File.
    Works Cited
    About the Contributors
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Also Available From Amy M. Goodburn
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